
This Sunday, Pastor Mike preached out of Matthew 7 and John 7. More specifically, he taught about the process of “de-logging”. This process speaks to the need to lovingly speak the corrective truth of the Bible to those in need of correction but also of the need to examine ourselves and to deal with the sin in our own hearts and lives. This sounds pretty easy. The problem with things that sound easy is that they generally tend to be much harder in practice than in theory.
This is, in fact, an area that is extremely difficult for me to practice consistently. It is easy for me to be critical. It is easy for me to find fault in situations, in people, and in pretty much anything else. It is also easy for me to hold grudges and to, in turn, contemplate the possibility of refusing to love people who have caused damage, hurt, or trauma in my life. Yet, if I refuse to deal with the sin in my heart (taking the log out of my own eye), I run the risk of turning into a bitter, unloving person who is concerned with constantly finding the faults in others (removing the speck out of another’s eye).
I find it helpful to be reminded of the grace of God that has been poured into my life. God freely chose to take my sin upon Himself, thus forever freely offering the grace to pull a rainforest full of logs out of my eyes and forever forgiving the sin that is so rampant in my heart. I thank God for His grace which reveals my sin for what it is. It is by His grace that I am able to be in a right relationship with God and ultimately am able to be in a right relationship with other people. I pray that if you struggle with being critical or judgmental that you begin with realizing that the only way to really love people begins with realizing God’s grace in your life through the free gift of salvation that has been given in Christ Jesus. As you realize God’s grace, it is my heartfelt desire that you walk in that same grace as you relate to other people…even in the midst of their sin and failures.


